Publication: CCM2 and CCM3 proteins contribute to vasculogenesis and angiogenesis in human placenta
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Date
2009
Authors
Tanriover, Gamze ; Seval, Yasemin ; Sati, Leyla ; Gunel, Murat ; Demir, Necdet
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Publisher
Murcia : F. Hernández
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DOI
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info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
Placenta as an ideal model to study
angiogenic mechanisms have been established in
previous studies. There are two processes,
vasculogenesis and angiogenesis, involved in blood
vessel formation during placental development.
Therefore, blood vessel formation is a crucial issue that
might cause vascular malformations. One of the vascular
malformations is cerebral cavernous malformation
(CCM) in the central nervous system, consisting of
endothelium-lined vascular channels without intervening
normal brain parenchyma. Three CCM loci have been
mapped as Ccm1, Ccm2, Ccm3 genes in CCM. In order
to investigate whether CCM proteins participate in blood
vessel formation, we report here the expression patterns
of CCM2 and CCM3 in developing and term human
placenta by means of immunohistochemistry and
Western blot analysis. CCM2 and CCM3 were obviously
detected in the vascular endothelium during early
pregnancy. Moreover, vascular endothelium of stem villi
revealed a moderate immunostaining for CCM2 and, to a
lesser extent, in the endothelium of mature intermediate
villi in term placenta. Interestingly, CCM3 immunostaining
was weakly localized in the endothelium of
mature intermediate villi and showed lesser expression
going toward stem villi in term placenta. The expression
patterns of the proteins were clearly identified in the
vascular endothelium of human placenta, suggesting that
they might play roles during angiogenesis and vasculogenesis. Furthermore, with this study, CCM2 and
CCM3 have been described for the first time in the
human placenta.
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